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1 September 2002 MOVEMENTS OF FLORIDA APPLE SNAILS IN RELATION TO WATER LEVELS AND DRYING EVENTS
Philip C. Darby, Robert E. Bennetts, Steven J. Miller, H. Franklin Percival
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Abstract

Florida apple snails (Pomacea paludosa) apparently have only a limited tolerance to wetland drying events (although little direct evidence exists), but their populations routinely face dry downs under natural and managed water regimes. In this paper, we address speculation that apple snails respond to decreasing water levels and potential drying events by moving toward refugia that remain inundated. We monitored the movements of apple snails in central Florida, USA during drying events at the Blue Cypress Marsh (BC) and at Lake Kissimmee (LK). We monitored the weekly movements of 47 BC snails and 31 LK snails using radio-telemetry. Snails tended to stop moving when water depths were < 10 cm; however, there was no apparent effect of water depth on distance traveled in water depths >10 cm. Snails moved along the greatest positive depth gradient (i.e., towards deeper water) when they encountered water depths between 10 and 20 cm. Snails tended to move toward shallower water in water depths ≥50 cm, suggesting that snails were avoiding deep water areas such as canals and sloughs. Of the 11 BC snails originally located in the area that eventually went dry, three (27%) were found in deep water refugia by the end of the study. Only one of the 31 LK snails escaped the drying event by moving to deeper water. Our results indicate that some snails may opportunistically escape drying events through movement. The tendency to move toward deeper water was statistically significant and indicates that this behavioral trait might enhance survival when the spatial extent of a dry down is limited. However, as water level falls below 10 cm, snails stop moving and become stranded. As the spatial extent of a dry down increases, we predict that the number of snails stranded would increase proportionally. Stranded Pomacea paludosa must contend with dry marsh conditions, possibly by aestivation. Little more than anecdotal information has been published on P. paludosa aestivation, but it is a common adaptation among other apple snails (Caenogastropoda: Ampullaridae).

Philip C. Darby, Robert E. Bennetts, Steven J. Miller, and H. Franklin Percival "MOVEMENTS OF FLORIDA APPLE SNAILS IN RELATION TO WATER LEVELS AND DRYING EVENTS," Wetlands 22(3), 489-498, (1 September 2002). https://doi.org/10.1672/0277-5212(2002)022[0489:MOFASI]2.0.CO;2
Received: 16 August 2001; Accepted: 1 May 2002; Published: 1 September 2002
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KEYWORDS
dry down
Florida apple snail
movements
Pomacea paludosa
water level
Wetlands
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